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187th District Court grants speedy‑trial dismissal and issues multiple sentences, bond settings during Oct. 21 docket
Summary
Judge Stephanie Boyd granted a defense motion to dismiss a delayed‑indictment case under Texas Code of Criminal Procedure 32.01 and issued several other dispositions at a busy Oct. 21 docket, including revocations, sentences and bond reinstatements.
Judge Stephanie Boyd granted a motion to dismiss one felony case for lack of a timely indictment and issued a series of other routine and contested dispositions during the Oct. 21 docket in the 187th District Court in Bexar County.
The court granted a defense motion to dismiss the case against Isabella Renee Molina (NIMAC 762965), finding the state had not indicted the case within the time period cited by the defense. Defense counsel said the arrest in that matter occurred on 04/29/2024 and that, as of Oct. 21, 2025, no indictment had been returned — "a total of 540 days in excess of the 180 day that's prescribed by statute," counsel told the court. The prosecutor did not oppose dismissal but asked that it be without prejudice. "Defense, your motion to dismiss will be granted," the judge said on the record.
Why it matters: The dismissal invoked the speedy‑trial statutory claim the defense raised (Code of Criminal Procedure 32.01). Dismissals for delay remove pending criminal charges for the listed defendant and may affect related calendar scheduling across county dockets.
Other key decisions and orders
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